The belief that America is not only different but «exceptional» is a central aspect of American identity that appears in the speeches and writings of John Winthrop to Martin Luther King Jr. to Ronald Reagan. Yet how and why America is exceptional has produced widely diverse answers. Philip Abbott alters this debate by arguing that Americans are the way they talk. He examines American exceptionalism as a preoccupation with «newness» in both politics and culture and traces its influence in a series of great American political texts, including the Declaration of Independence, The Federalist Papers, Democracy in America, Walden, The Souls of Black Folk, and various novels and speeches.

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About the Author:

The Author: Philip Abbott is Distinguished Graduate Professor of Political Science at Wayne State University. He is the author of numerous books and articles on American political thought and culture including Strong Presidents and Political Thought in America (second edition). He recently held the Fulbright Thomas Jefferson Chair in American Studies at the University of Amsterdam.